Sorry about the past week of silence, faithful readers (all three of you). Nothing was happening that I could distill into a coherent entry, and I've been wicked fatigued for most of that time. Tonight, however, the Harris County Green Party has elections for half of its Steering Committee, including one co-chairperson, that could determine its future...or whether, indeed, it will have a future.

In this collection of Blogrolls, of particular interest to me is the Grungy story. Rice University's Marching Owl Band has already formally renamed its band hall in honor of my friend John "Grungy" Gladu, an active MOBster for the better part of 44 years. Grungy first "marched" with the band when he was a senior at Scarborough High School, when the MOB reached out to some area high school bands to provide some extras to satirize Texas Tech's gigantic marching band, which at that time was the nation's largest. He missed a few years when his then-wife Rebecca took a medical job in Hawai'i.

============A Texas SBOE candidate called the Parkland high school shooting a "false flag" and the children survivors "crisis actors." Texas Freedom Network reveals the unhinged social media posts of District 11 Republican Cheryl Surber.

RG Ratcliffe at Texas Monthly sees Michael Quinn Sullivan's latest stunt--mailing a postcard to voters that looked like a legal notice--as something considerably worse than a dirty political trick.

It's not just Greg Abbott who's working hard (and spending hard) to defeat Rep. Sarah Davis in #HD134. Jessica Glenza at The Guardian writes about infamous anti-vaxxer Andrew Wakefield's full-court press to help ultraconservative lackey Susanna Dokupil win the Republican primary. (dbc adds:Whilst lunching at Mainely Sandwiches yesterday, after Manchester City finished thrashing Arsenal in the English League Cup final on ESPN, I saw an actual attack ad from Sarah Davis's campaign addressing the many oddities that Ms. Dokupil has exhibited. It's interesting, and perversely gratifying, to see a relatively pleasant Republican like Rep. Davis fight back and pull no punches.)

Grits for Breakfast asked two hard questions: what is the point of mainstream media endorsing GOP candidates? And why make excuses for Harris County judges who chose poorly when it came to deciding bail for poor people?

The Dallas Observer also blogged about how the Fifth Circuit's ruling on the Harris County cash bail system is going to affect Dallas County.

============In campaign finance reporting that won't bore you to tears, a conservative retiree named Michael Porter gave half a million bucks to something called #ProjectRedTX, and another named Patricia Walker contributed over $100,000 in small donations to Democrats—many $50 or less, in 1,400 transactions—through ActBlue. They were two of the top 27 megadonors in 2017 (23 were GOP), as reported by Open Secrets.

And the TSTA Blog calls out state senators who underfund public education, then deny having done so when it is pointed out to them.

The hotly-contested #TX-07 primary exploded onto the national scene after the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee launched an unprecedented attack on Laura Moser, presumably because of their belief that she is 'too librul' to defeat the incumbent, Republican John Culberson. PDiddie at Brains and Eggs posted that her Twitter supporters responded with corrections to the record and donations to her campaign.

The Lewisville ISD and the Office of the Attorney General of Texas exchanged letters that seemed to escalate the hostilities over the school district's encouraging teachers and supporters of public education to vote, and the OAGTX's threat of prosecution for "electioneering," a violation of Texas election law. The story is in the Texan Journal.

The Beaumont Enterprise reports that thousands of Southeast Texas voters did not confirm their addresses to register to vote this spring and hundreds more requested mail-in ballots. This is an unanticipated and lingering effect of Hurricane Harvey that could impact voter turnout in Jefferson, Orange, and Hardin counties.

============And in developments beyond politics:

More than a thousand Texas teenagers have been ordered to jail—not juvenile detention, adult jail—on charges that began with skipping class and escalated to unpaid court fines. The costs to their education are high. As Buzzfeed documents, some kids, like Serena Vela, never go back.

Andrew Reimers at TribTalk relates the background connection of oil and higher education in the Lone Star State, and concludes that the fossil fuel divestment movement, i.e. "keep it in the ground," may dictate that it's time for the Permanent University Fund to consider diversifying its portfolio.

Beyond Bones updates us on the Mexican freetail bat colony that has long resided under a Houston bridge over Buffalo Bayou. Their numbers were decimated by Harvey's flooding, but they perhaps are making a comeback (although with their previous behaviors altered).